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African Information Society Initiative

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Title: African Information Society Initiative


1
African Information Society Initiative
  • an Action Framework to Build Africas Information
    and Communication Infrastructure

2
What is AISI?
  • African Information Society Initiative an action
    Framework to Build Africas Information and
    Communication Infrastructure
  • Adopted by ECA Conference of Ministers of
    Economic Planning and Development in 1996
  • Implemented by United Nations Economic Commission
    for Africa (Addis Ababa)

3
AISI
  • Role of Regional Conference on Access to
    Telematics (1995)
  • 1995 Conference of Ministers requested plan to
    put Africa on the Information Superhighway
  • Drafted by High Level Working Group of African
    Experts on Information and Communication
    Technologies
  • www.bellanet.org.partners/aisi/more/aisi.htm

4
Why was AISI needed?
  • African delay in entering information age
  • Mbeki (Brussels, 1996)- more telephone lines in
    Manhattan than all of sub-Saharan Africa
  • Need for an African direction to AII
  • Need to wake up African policy makers

5
African information and communication needs
  • One minute calls from African capitals to Europe
    or the U.S.- 3-7/minute
  • Post Letters from Niger to Ethiopia can take 8
    years
  • Libraries few or no public libraries accessible
    to students in many African countries where
    there are, immense paucity of books and journals
  • In sub-Saharan African, one fixed line telephone
    for every 635 people
  • One computer for every 500 people

6
AISI vision
  • Every man, woman, child, village, public and
    private sector office with secure access to
    information and knowledge through ICTs by 2010
  • Information and communication technologies not a
    luxury for the elite but an absolute necessity
    for the masses

7
Working with African countries on . . .
  • Developing national plans for building
    information and communication infrastructure
  • Eliminating legal and regulatory barriers to the
    use of information and communication technologies
  • Establishing an enabling environment to foster
    the free flow and development of information and
    communication in society
  • Developing policies and implementing plans for
    using information and communication technologies
    in the public sector

8
  • Identifying information and communication
    applications in areas of highest impact on
    socio-economic development
  • Facilitating the establishment of locally based,
    low-cost and widely accessible Internet services
    and information content
  • Preparing plans to develop human resources in
    information and communication technologies
  • Adopting policies and strategies to increase
    access to information and communication
    facilities with priorities for rural areas,
    grassroots society, women and youth
  • Raising awareness of the potential benefits of
    information and communication infrastructure.

9
Concentration on
  • Policy and enabling environment- National
    Information and Communication Infrastructure
    plans and policies (NICIs)
  • Infrastructure (connectivity)
  • Content development
  • Democratizing access

10
Implementation
  • Through partnership-PICTA, Global Knowledge
    PartnershipATAC
  • Major events
  • 1998- global connectivity for African conference
  • 1999- African Development Forum the challenge to
    Africa of globalization and the information age

11
ADF themes
  • Information economy
  • Infrastructure
  • Content
  • Policy
  • Governance
  • Democratizing access
  • Report www.un.org/depts/eca/adf99reportintro.htm

12
ADF Focus groups
  • Private sector
  • Diaspora
  • Women
  • Academia
  • Youth

13
Post ADF areas of emphasis
  • Policies and strategies
  • Electronic commerce
  • ICTs and health
  • ICTs and education

14
AISI accomplishments
  • Sensitization
  • Development of national strategies
    www.bellanet.org/partners/aisi/nici/index.htm
  • Promoting connectivity
  • Promoting partnership
  • Stimulating content development
    www.bellanet.org/partners/aisi/adf99docs/docs.htm

15
On the ground, 2001
  • dramatic infrastructure improvements
  • 5 countries connected to Internet (1996)
  • 53 countries connected (2001)
  • 450 ISPs

16
Current situation
  • Internet local call system in 15 countries
  • 20,000 hosts connected to Internet
  • opening of Nigerian and Eritrean markets
  • content growing, particularly in diaspora niches,
    francophone areas
  • www.bellanet.org/partners/aisi/adf99docs/infrastru
    cture.htm

17
but . . .
  • most connections in capital cities
  • long distance calls from secondary cities
  • 0.06 connected in SSA
  • only 11 countries with more than 5000 users
  • low total bandwidth (55Mbps)
  • high costs (50/mo. for 5 hours)

18
trend toward telecommunication liberalization
  • movement from state-controlled centralized
    domestic monopolies to market-driven,
    decentralized with foreign participation
  • underway in all but 11 countries
  • most separated posts and telegraph
  • lower computer import duties
  • establishment separate regulatory authorities
  • most liberalization in cellular and broadcasting
  • least in basic telephony

19
Continuing infrastructure insufficiencies
  • little growth in teledensity
  • no regional backbones

20
Demographics of African Internet usage
  • Highly educated, predominantly male users in
    capital city
  • Communication between Africa and developed world
  • Great emphasis on public access
  • Major institutional users NGOs, private
    companies, universities, international
    organizations

21
Universities access limited
  • Mostly senior faculty, high administration
    officials connected
  • Virtually no access for students
  • Only 20 African universities with full Internet
    connectivity

22
History of Internet growth
  • Period of NGO-led Fidonet connectivity
    (1987-1993)
  • Entry of bi-lateral and multi-lateral projects
    (1995-2000)
  • USAID Leland Initiative
  • UNDP African Internet Initiative and Sustainable
    Development Network Program
  • UNESCO RINAF
  • World Bank InfoDev
  • Private sector led, 1998-presentAfrica Online
    major international ISP

23
Current areas of Internet development
  • Online government tender offerings
  • National e-commerce sites
  • Stock exchanges online
  • Radio stations webcasting
  • Webcams

24
Overall situation
  • Spectacular growth in African terms
  • But, falling further behind in relation to rest
    of world
  • Low investment levels in telecommunications
  • Rapid growth where foreign direct investment
    permitted

25
Conclusion
  • Continuing need for push on policy front and
    creation of enabling environments
  • To release national and diaspora entrepreneurial
    energy

26
Contacts for further information
  • faye_at_un.orgnhafkin_at_uneca.orgnhafkin_at_hotmail.com
  • http//www.bellanet.org/partners/aisi
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